LAGOS, (AFP) – Nigerian police have arrested three members of a
criminal gang accused of fleecing unsuspecting job seekers with a
promise to recruit them into the navy, authorities said Tuesday.
Police spokesman Frank Mba said in a statement that the three
suspects, led by a dismissed navy staffer, were arrested last week in a
hotel in the central town of Makurdi based on a tipoff.
“At the time of their arrest, 11 people already hoodwinked into
believing they were on the verge of being recruited into the Nigerian
navy were found with them,” he said.
He said each applicant was made to pay between 10,000 naira (64
dollars, 48 euros) and 20,000 naira. Most Nigerians live on less than
two dollars a day.
Mba said items including two laptops, three navy uniforms, one navy
identity card bearing the name of the gang leader and the sum of 100,000
naira (635 dollars / 473 euros) collected from the victims were
recovered from the gang.
Mba advised job seekers to always authenticate “information relating
to job adverts from appropriate authorities in order not to fall prey to
unscrupulous fraudsters.”
Despite its vast oil wealth, Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation
of 160 million people, has an unemployment rate of some 23 percent, with
youth unemployment double that amount. Such fake employment scams occur
regularly.
Tuesday, 12 February 2013
Fake navy recruitment gang arrested
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